Porosity of serially sectioned interplanetary dust particles


Autoria(s): Mackinnon, Ian D.R.; Lindsay, Charles; Bradley, John P.; Yatchmenoff, Bart
Data(s)

1987

Resumo

The application of epoxy embedding and microtomy to individual chondritic interplanetary dust particles (lOP's)(Bradley and Brownlee, 1986a) provides not only higher precision in thin-film elemental analyses (Bradley and Brownlee, 19861:1), but also allows a wealth of other important techniques for the micro-characterization of these primitive extraterrestrial materials. For example, individual sections (e.g. 100 nm thick) or a series of sections, can be examined using image analysis techniques which utilize either transmitted or scanned secondary electron images, or alternatively, secondary X-ray spectra collected concurrently from a given region of sample. Individual particles, or groups of particles with similar image characteristics can then be rapidly identified using conventional grey-scale/particle recognition techniques for each microtomed section of lOP. This type of image analysis provides a suitable method for determination of particle size and shape distribution as well as porosity throughout the aggregate.

Identificador

http://eprints.qut.edu.au/55671/

Publicador

John Wiley & Sons, Inc.

Relação

http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/j.1945-5100.1987.tb01278.x/abstract

Mackinnon, Ian D.R., Lindsay, Charles, Bradley, John P., & Yatchmenoff, Bart (1987) Porosity of serially sectioned interplanetary dust particles. Meteoritics, 22(4), pp. 450-451.

Fonte

Institute for Future Environments

Palavras-Chave #040302 Extraterrestrial Geology #040306 Mineralogy and Crystallography #chondrites #experimental studies #extraterrestrial geology #interplanetary dust #interplanetary space #meteorites #porosity #stony meteorites #X-ray spectroscopy
Tipo

Journal Article